Luxembourg law pledge

Revision as of 16:35, 31 October 2018 by Amwelladmin (talk | contribs) (Amwelladmin moved page Luxembourg pledge to Luxembourg law pledge)
A word about credit risk mitigation

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A pledge — that is, a form of security interest — governed by Luxembourg law.

Especially useful if your lex situs happens to be Luxembourg, which has always been relatively common, and is more so now the United Kingdom has sentenced its own financial services industry to a lingering and painful death by existing the European Union, likely to become ever more common.

Not having a developed law of equity[1], Luxembourg law doesn’t faff around with concepts like fixed or floating charges, making its security analysis a lot less tedious: there is none of this doleful “is it a fixed charge or a floating charge, oh woe is me! What would Re Spectrum Plus or the extended liens decision have to say about that?”

When do you need a Lux pledge?

When the assets you are taking security over are situated in Luxembourg. See: lex situs.

What’s in it

Luxembourg law pledges are boring documents. I mean no slight on Luxembourg, or Luxembourg law, when I say that. Luxembourg is a nice place and it has excellent laws. Lux pledges should be boring. They fulfill an important, but nonetheless mechanical role: they make sure your security arrangement works as a matter of Luxembourg law, since that’s where the assets are, and you’ll be at the mercy of the Luxembourgoisie should you want to enforce it.

It’s a simple process and there's little magic in it, but this won’t stop custodians developing 17-page templates. Just to be sure, you understand.

Definitions

Of course there will be definitions. what self-respecting legal document will be without them? Expect to see, in particular, reference to:

The 2001 Law, being the law dated 1 August 2001 regarding the transfer of securities and other fungible instruments, as amended.
The Financial Collateral Law, being the Luxembourg law of 5 August 2005 on financial collateral arrangements, as amended.
Financial Instruments, being financial instruments (instruments financiers[2]) in the widest sense of the word admitted under Luxembourg law, though you can expect the defintion to rabbit on a bit: you know, whether or not in dematerialised form, printed on urine-soaked vellum, gossamer, kleenex etc.

See also

References

  1. The fiduciary concept notwithstanding, which sounds EXACTLY like a product of the law of equity.
  2. It is a common feature of foreign law pledges to sprinkle elaborate foreign lingo around the document in italics as if they are some kinds of magic words.